C.A.T.S. — 2021

C.A.T.S. (Cloned Accent-Tap Singles) — 2021 is an accent-tap and singlestrokes warm-up that employs doublestops in order to match stick motions between the hands before splitting the hands up into the singlestroke patterns. This is the same idea behind Singles a la Clone from page 5 of Twelve Eight-Bar Exercises in 12/8 to Stave off Cabin Fever (With Play-Along Practice Recordings) as well as Mantra #7 Singlestroke Rolls / Consilience from page 5 of Mantras For Rudimental Snare Drum, now available in a hip ensemble warm-up that would likely suit many collegiate and independent drumlines very well!

The concept is further described in the aforementioned Cabin Fever book:

The lead-hand breakdowns of accented singlestroke rolls and singlestroke tap rolls will generally have different tendencies. A downstroke followed by taps tends to feel different than a bunch of taps followed by an upstroke. This exercise aims to unify your approach to upstrokes/downstrokes within the context of the different accented singlestroke rudiments. The doublestops with only one hand accented at a time will expose your tendencies on upstrokes and buck motions, allowing you to more smoothly transition into singlestroke rolls and singlestroke tap rolls. Keep it smooth, people. This is another great one to try with brushes, drum set sticks, and with a towel on your drum or pad.

Edit 15 December 2021: Fixed a typo in the last measure of the snare part.

Ghost Meat

Ghost Meat has the bones of an accent tap exercise, but the muscle of a doublestroke exercise and the skin of a singlestrokes exercise. The name was inspired by the notion of “ghost notes” which are the subtle inner beats that add character and direction to an overarching rhythmic figure… it’s always crucial that ghost notes be sweet and low. This warm-up employs solid, monotone slurred ruffs (“pudidahs”) in both ninelet and sextuplet contexts before adding some accents to create true “ghost note” contexts. The bottom half of the piece shifts from the accent-tap focus to a singlestroke rolls focus, and it will require considerable maturity to accurately shift between the ninelet, sixteenth-note, and sextuplet rhythms of the singlestrokes.

Check Me

Check Me is a roll builder that works especially hard on the standard check breakdown of 7-stroke rolls appearing before and after eighth notes. In my own practice and teaching, honestly, I never run this breakdown. It feels weird to play 8th-note triplets offset by an eighth note, and the more impactful breakdowns of upbeat triplet rolls are the ones that emphasize the second note of the diddle appearing on the upbeat (or downbeat).

In other words, I find it easier to understand upbeat triplet rolls by hearing all of the sextuplets and checking the appropriate ones against the upbeat and downbeat. Additionally, being able to hear all of the sextuplets and check the appropriate ones against the upbeat and downbeat is an invaluable skill for playing all kinds of triplet rolls (even the most normallest triplet rolls in the world). So when my students encounter upbeat/offset triplet rolls, I use it as an opportunity to open their ears and their minds to the reality of rolls as “rhythms with a certain sticking”… rather than leaning on the “check into roll” paradigm when the check is probably the least solid thing in the student’s head.

Having said all that, I do not have the hubris it would take to say that it is worthless to rehearse this check pattern—I simply choose to do something else that is already important otherwise and seems to achieve the same end result. In fact, by giving this check pattern a chance, I came up with this kinda hip sounding warm-up. And everything I’ve said above about hearing sextuplets applies perfectly to the second half of the piece anyway, so now you have the whole package!

Edit 14 November 2021: I’ve added some variations to this piece: first, to relate the roll patterns to the 8th-note breakdown, so now you truly do get the whole package; and second, to include up-beat triplet roll figures that do not switch hands, since those appear at least as frequently in rudimental music as ones that do.

Flam Placements

Flam Placements drills the physical demands of playing flam accents (the dut-digga-dut one handed breakdown: R-rrr-R-rrr-), but instead of spending a bunch of time adding various pieces of the rudiment to this one handed breakdown, you will be moving an accent around within this pattern in order to build a command over grace-note placement. This change in priorities elevates the “dut digga dut”-style exercise into something that more effectively builds grace-note control and encourages the correct application of multiple heights.

The first pattern (meas. 1 & 5) works the common “taps before a flam” motif, while also hitting the one-handed breakdown of flam accents. The second pattern (meas. 2 & 6) works on the tap-flam-tap motif that happens within flam accents. The third pattern (meas. 3 & 7) works the common “taps after a flam” motif, while also hitting the one-handed breakdown of flam accents. You are challenged to perform a consistent one-handed breakdown while subtly changing the timing of the taps in order to correctly assign each of the three low strokes an appropriate role as a true tap or as the grace note of a flam. This additional demand will force you to improve your awareness of grace-note timing, and the extra attention you have to pay to these taps will force you to improve your height definition.

For these reasons, I will go out on a limb and say that these modifications make this “flam accent heights” exercise an even better flam accent heights exercise and a more broadly useful flams builder. For being pretty hip, pretty basic, but also unique and immensely useful, I am especially proud of this warm-up.

Pivot Point

Pivot Point gets the hands moving and warm, with particular attention paid to establishing and focusing the fulcrum on each hand. The fulcrum is the most important part of any grip—it is the point about which the stick is allowed to pivot within the hand. This kind of freedom for the stick to move within the hand is important for allowing the stick to resonate when it strikes the drumhead.

Additionally, however, having the pivot point remain consistent across all rudimental content is another crucial component of grip fundamentals. How the stick resonates will change depending on where the fulcrum is positioned along the stick. How the fingers are allowed to work against the rebound of a stroke to achieve additional bounces also depends heavily on how the fulcrum is constructed. The focus for exercises that do not demand active engagement from the fulcrum/fingers is to force ourselves to maintain a well-constructed fulcrum anyway. If we make sure it’s always there when we “don’t need it,” then it will always be ready for a quick crush, diddle, etc. as needed, without having to constantly adjust the stick within the hand to achieve differing rudimental demands.

The purpose of a legatos exercise is to establish your baseline approach to grip and motion. Make sure you’re establishing the same grip and motion fundamentals that you will apply to everything else!

These ideas are further described in Quality Control for Rudimental Drummers:

The fulcrum is the most important part of a grip. For many situations, the stick functions as an extension of the hand, moving just as the hand does; however, the stick is also allowed some freedom to move within the hand, especially necessary for faster figures that require action from the fingers. The fulcrum is the pivot point for that motion, which comes into play at the moments when the bead strikes the drumhead. It is the part of the hand that actively exerts force on the stick (through engagement of the muscles) in order to hold onto it, and it should be well established at all times. It may become more engaged for crushes and faster multi-beat figures, but it is always present, even when you think it may not need to be. [p. 12 Digital Download Edition]

Slow Lifts

Slow Lifts (2021) is the flams builder for everyone! It’s all about flam fundamentals: specifically, dropping the grace note from a low height and then slowly lifting to the accent height to comfortably occupy time and space with motion. Snares and tenors have a three-height pattern to accentuate the distinction between a true grace note and a primary note at any dynamic. This warm-up is well suited to a line with performers of many different skill levels.

21st Century Sanford Man

21st Century Sanford Man (2021) is a truly fundamental way to work on double beats and to connect double beat fundamentals to the doublestroke roll. Segments of the exercise must be performed with a “maximum rebound” (or “pause at the up”) approach, whereby the performers focus on allowing every stroke to return to the attack height and simply stay there before the next attack. This extreme approach to emphasizing rebound allows performers to work through their issues in maximizing both rebound and velocity (sound production) in both double beat and doublestroke roll contexts.

Double Hang Time

Double Hang Time (2021) focuses on the concept of “hang time” as it pertains to connecting the “Sanford” approach to the doublestroke roll. Second-note rebound is especially important in doublestroke rolls, so it is great to have an exercise that challenges this aspect of doublestroke fundamentals. Unfortunately, the aggressive feel of the Sanford-type pattern often translates poorly into doublestroke roll fundamentals because of the difference in “hang time” (the time between the second note of a doublestroke and the very next note on the same hand, during which the stick is rebounded but not being thrown into the drum). This exercise juxtaposes the Sanford pattern with an inverted roll breakdown so that the aggressive, high-velocity, high-rebound approach facilitated by the Sanford pattern can be applied with the increased hang time of a doublestroke roll pattern.

A common tendency is to lighten up on the doublestroke roll in order to more easily fill the hang time with motion; less velocity into the drumhead means a slower rebound, which means your hand is not awkwardly paused at the attack height during the hang time. The challenge is to play with high velocity, allow a lot of rebound, and be comfortable waiting for the next attack. In this manner, the benefits of a Sanford-type exercise can be best applied to doublestroke roll patterns.

Groovy Grandmas

Groovy Grandmas (2021) is a paradiddles warm-up that really is all about the paradiddles. The long series of monotone taps with paradiddle sticking should really get you focused on consistency and quickness of wrist turn at the low dynamic. The accents that create the grooves, then, must rise out of the monolithic sound created by the ensemble being locked in completely to the taps.

Syncoparadiddles

Syncoparadiddles (2021) is a paradiddles warm-up that employs a repeating syncopated motif to cast paradiddles in various revealing situations to help you better apply great fundamentals to paradiddles. The beginning is all about understanding the application of rebound and maximising the efficient use of rebound while also playing aggressively into the drum. Measures 5–8 are all about consistently even taps before the accents are added in the latter half of the exercise.

Doublestops

Doublestops (2007) is a legatos exercise that includes doublestops to encourage players to match stick motion between the hands. I cooked this up right out of high school, when I thought I might end up teaching somewhere (I didn’t that year). It’s super simple, and probably very unoriginal… but I looked around the place, and I noticed a dearth of “8 on a Hand” on Fat Matt Drums, so I figured I’d go back to basics and look wayyyyy in the back of the vault for something. I was really pleased to notice the second and third page’s variations with dynamics… those are lots of fun to work on.

Ultimately, I don’t think I used this exercise with any line I taught; however, in retrospect, it would have been a good one—reaping the benefits of making doublestops a regular part of the rehearsal programme, instead of merely a variation to “8s” that you occasionally call upon.

The benefits—and pitfalls—of using doublestops in simple contexts like this are described in Quality Control for Rudimental Drummers:

In either [traditional or matched] grip, doublestops will be a great tool for matching stick motions on different rudiments. However, if your hands are poorly-coordinated and the doublestops are dirty, there may be a tendency to rely on larger muscle groups to achieve the strokes (e.g., using a “karate chop” style forearm motion instead of rotation at the wrist), as these muscle groups are easier to match in order to clean up the sound (in matched grip and traditional grip). This is a major pitfall that negates any benefit to rehearsing a pattern as doublestops, so make sure that you are not building such habits. [p. 10 Digital Download Edition]

[…]

Both hands play identical parts as doublestops, and each hand checks the timing and sound quality of the other. Additionally, you can observe how the sticks move to ensure that both sticks are achieving the rudimental demands using identical motions. This practice is especially useful with a mirror and/or video camera.

[…]

When the hands are playing identical patterns, hand-to-hand differences in how the smaller muscle groups achieve rudimental demands can cause a frustrating amount of dirt (rhythmic imprecision), especially in traditional grip, where all motions except for the “karate chop” forearm assistance motion are completely different between the hands. A temptation will be to rely on larger muscle groups to achieve clean doublestops, as these are the motions that are easiest to match between your two hands; however, this practice will lead to an overreliance on forearm motion and the building of bad habits.

Accept that there will be dirt at first and that it may be difficult to eliminate. Still, commit to good technique and to truly matching the motions of the two hands. The purpose […] is to challenge you; do not take any shortcuts on the path to improvement. [p. 23 Digital Download Edition]

Vorticity

Vorticity (2021) (∇ x v) is an ensemble chop-out exercise that hits lots of big legatos, some doublestrokes, some rolls (and even some flam accents, snares!), and some more big legatos, so your line can jam out, get a work out, and stretch out, all in one warm-up. This piece would be suitable for a committed high school or university drumline, and I think the vibe, the vocabulary, and the vivacity of the music would make this a hit in any parking lot or pre-show warm-up.

The title is an obvious nod to the Bluecoats warm-up that inspired the person who asked me to write something like this to ask me to write something like this.

Shawnlet Bucks

A rare sight indeed: something on FatMattDrums that was not written by FatMatt, so take heed! It’s good as gold.

Shawnlet Bucks (ca. 2004) is a straightforward approach to working on accents and taps in a battery setting that allows you to keep things interesting while maintaining the ensemble’s focus on the important fundamentals.

There is a detailed description on the *.pdf, but the main idea is to string sequences of variations together. Maybe there’s a cool combination that is your go-to accent/tap warm-up, but the sky is really the limit. These recordings provide a few examples:

Example 1. S: 3, 2, 2, 1; T: 1, 2, 1, 3, 1; B: 5, 3. Example 2. S: 5, 3, 2; T: 3, 2, 5; B: 2, 5, 3.
Example 3. S: 1, 1, 4, 2, 2; T: 1, 2, 3, 4; B: 1, 1, 5, 3. Example 4. S: 7, 2, 2, 3, 1; T: 5, 2, 2, 3, 3; B: 4, 8, 2, 1.
Example 5. S: 3, 3, 3, 5, 1; T: 6, 2, 1, 4, 1, 1; B: 9, 3, 2, 1. Example 6. S: 5, 4, 3, 2, 3; T: 3, 5, 4, 5; B: 4, 5, 3, 2, 2, 1

Chow Down

Chow Down (2021) is an all-around and all-in-one ensemble warm-up targeting the high school level. It consists of five “movements”: 1. Legatos, 2. Bucks, 3. Doubles I, 4. Doubles II, and 5. Triplet Rolls. Each movement could be used as a standalone warm-up, and you can gradually work each movement into the full sequence as the season progresses, so that you have both a warm-up book, and a cohesive ensemble warm-up, however you are able to deploy it. It may be beneficial for the snares to learn the tenor part in some places, as some passages involve the snares playing a fundamental exercise pattern while the tenors play an even more fundamental breakdown of the motion involved in that pattern.

This warm-up was originally conceived for tri-toms instead of quad or quint tenors, so that is the arrangement you will hear in the Virtual DrumLine (VDL) recording. I am providing the score to both arrangements here:

Kicked in the Grace

Kicked in the Grace (2007) is a four-measure flam étude that employs a myriad of grace-note contexts: flam-accents, flam-taps, swiss triplets, inverted flam-taps, etc. The scope is broadened by adding drags to produce different variations.

In a line setting, the variations can be chained together as appropriate. Additionally, the snare and quad parts, by ending on an eighth note upbeat, allow "off the left" variations to be seamlessly added to the sequence.

Seven 8&25

Played ad nauseam by the 2011 Athens Drive winter line, Seven 8&25 (2011) is an ensemble warm-up built from a seven-stroke rolls exercise and the ever-famous 8&25. I couldn't help but quote the end of my high school's triplet diddles exercise (by Will Goodyear)... it's hip.

The first half of the piece emphasizes the attacks of roll figures; the first triplet diddle is either on a downbeat or an eighth note upbeat. The second half emphasizes quality and endurance... mostly endurance, but we all love 8&25, right?

Dub/Huk

I inflicted Dub/Huk (2010) on the Athens Drive HS Drumline in order to help work on doublestrokes: specifically, second note quality in doublestroke rolls, and sixteenth-note consistency (timing and quality) for paradiddle figures.

The first half of the piece builds the doublestroke roll and inverted roll from their one-handed breakdowns. I like working on inverted rolls because the second note of the doublestroke is placed on the eighth note partials, rather than sixteenth-note upbeat partials; i.e. deficiencies in timing and quality of those notes will be more obvious to the ear and mind, allowing these deficiencies to be corrected.

The second half works on a syncopated hucka-dig (one-handed breakdown of a paradiddle-diddle) pattern and then fills it in to the corresponding paradiddle figure. Ensemble timing is tricky for this part; accents on the fourth sixteenth note partial will tend to be late, while those on the upbeat eighth notes will tend to be early. This warm-up is a huge bag of mess without dedicated practice with a metronome.

The bass drum part is such that all the written notes could be played as a single unison part.

Blat

Blat (2010) combines triplestrokes with hugadigs (one-handed breakdown of a flam-tap) and flam rudiments. The more thinly-written middle part centres around what's called the "Cary lick" in the quad line, with a flam accent breakdown in the snare line.

The way the heights are notated, there is a slight difference between the threes of the triplestroke bars, and those of the flam-tap bars, though not every instructor/line makes such a distinction. I think of triplestrokes as being allowed a bit more freedom to rebound, while hugadigs are controlled a bit more to achieve a lower height on the third note (the grace note of the flam-tap).

Slurred Ruff

Slurred Ruff (2010) was used by the NC State and Athens Drive HS drumlines to work on tap sound quality between doublestrokes and single beats. Whether your doublestrokes tend to overpower the single beats, or vice versa, your ears will pick up on it. This warm-up doesn't actually have straight paradiddles in it, but the skills it hits are most related to the other paradiddles warm-ups. 

Timing-wise, one tendency seems to be (I don't know why; it's just what I've seen) to tighten up the ruffs on the all-tap bars: i.e. to play something like 1 &a2 &a3 &a4 &a on the single-height bars. A constant doublestroke motion on one hand must be maintained, whether the other hand executes a "buck" motion, or a rebounded "8 on a Hand" motion.

The bass drum part is such that all the written notes could be played as a single unison part.